Mets' bats get to Vargas early in 8-5 victory over Brewers
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| Regular Season Series |
| New York leads 4-2 (as of Wed 8/1) |
| Fri 5/11 |
@NYM 5, MIL 4 |
Recap |
| Sat 5/12 |
MIL 12, @NYM 3 |
Recap |
| Sun 5/13 |
@NYM 9, MIL 1 |
Recap |
| Tue 7/31 |
@MIL 4, NYM 2 |
Recap |
| >Wed 8/1 |
NYM 8, @MIL 5 |
Box Score |
| Thu 8/2 |
NYM 12, @MIL 4 |
Recap |
| · Complete Schedule: Brewers | Mets |
| Scoring Summary |
| NYM | MIL |
 | 1st | P Fielder homered to center, J Hardy and R Braun scored. | 0 | 3 |
 | 2nd | M Anderson singled to center, C Delgado scored, M Alou to second. | 1 | 3 |
 | 2nd | R Castro homered to left center, M Alou and M Anderson scored. | 4 | 3 |
 | 2nd | C Hart singled to center, T Graffanino scored. | 4 | 4 |
 | 2nd | J Hardy singled to deep right, C Hart to second, C Hart scored, J Hardy to second on error by right fielder S Green. | 4 | 5 |
 | 3rd | M Anderson homered to right, L Castillo and D Wright scored. | 7 | 5 |
 | 6th | S Green homered to right center. | 8 | 5 |
| · View complete Play-By-Play |
| Game Information |
| Stadium | Miller Park, Milwaukee, WI |
| Attendance | 42,058 (100.4% full) - % is based on regular season capacity |
| Game Time | 2:53 |
| Weather | 86 degrees, partly cloudy |
| Wind | 9 mph |
| Umpires | Home Plate - Brian Gorman, First Base - Bill Miller, Second Base - Marvin Hudson, Third Base - Chad Fairchild |
| A CLOSER LOOK |
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• Summary: Ramon Castro and Marlon Anderson each hit three-run homers and the Mets rallied to beat the Brewers.
• Turning point: Anderson's homer in the third with two outs gave New York a 7-5 lead and chased Claudio Vargas.
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| Anderson |
• Hero: Anderson, batting .235, almost doubled his RBIs total for the season, from five to nine.
• Unsung hero: Mets pitcher Oliver Perez struggled early but settled down to strike out 11.
• Figure this: Wednesday night's attendance was announced as 42,058, setting a team record as the 21st sellout of the season.
• Quotable: "I take it like we're tied the whole way through. Every game's important, not only the series. I think every game is important." -- Prince Fielder on the Brewers falling out of first place
-- ESPN.com news services
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Mets 8, Brewers 5
MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Mets starter
Oliver Perez admits he sometimes lets his emotions get the best of him. So after making a throwing error and giving up a homer to
Prince Fielder in the first inning Wednesday night, he needed some counseling from his catcher.
"I had to go out there three or four times to talk to him,"
Ramon Castro said, "because he was too hyper."
Perez calmed down and started throwing his slider for strikes, helping New York beat Milwaukee 8-5 and knocking the Brewers from their perch atop the NL Central for the first time since April 21.
Chicago beat Philadelphia 5-4 Wednesday night, moving the Cubs a fraction of a percentage point (.5377 to .5370) ahead in the division.
"I take it like we're tied the whole way through," Fielder said. "Every game's important, not only the series. I think every game is important."
Milwaukee starter
Claudio Vargas gave up three-run homers to Castro and
Marlon Anderson in the first three innings.
"It was a tough outing," Vargas said. "It was only two pitches -- two home runs. I missed the spot and I paid."
Except for two relief appearances earlier in the year, it was the shortest outing of the season for Vargas (9-3). He was pulled after giving up seven runs on five hits and a pair of walks in 2 2/3 innings.
"When I started I felt really good," Vargas said. "The second inning I had no control with my pitches, like when I started the game, and that's when I got in trouble."
The Brewers' No. 5 starter is tied for the second-most victories on the staff but has gone more than six innings only once in 19 starts.
"Claudio went out in the first inning and was sharp, but came back out in the second and just couldn't get it going, and from that point on just really struggled," Brewers manager Ned Yost said.
Brewers reliever
Manny Parra gave up one run in 6 1/3 innings to limit the damage, but it didn't do much to help an already weary Brewers bullpen.
After giving up five runs -- four earned -- in the first two innings, Perez recovered to record a season-high 11 strikeouts. Perez (10-7) pitched six innings, giving up only two of his five hits after the second.
"He settled in, and he seemed to be a little stronger at the end of the game," said Mets manager Willie Randolph, who pulled Perez after six innings because his pitch count had hit 115.
Perez said he enjoys getting caught up in the game, but sometimes tries to do too much.
"I was trying to forget everything and make a new start," Perez said.
Billy Wagner pitched the ninth for his 25th save in 26 chances.
Even in victory, the Mets marveled at Fielder's home run, which clanged off an advertising sign high in center field for his 31st of the season and first since July 13. The 18 games and 67 at-bats in between were both season highs.
Asked what Fielder's ball looked like from where he was standing, center fielder Anderson said "real small."
Anderson, who was playing his first game in center for the Mets this year, joked about his unfamiliarity with the position but acknowledged there wasn't much he could do with Fielder's ball.
"Superman wouldn't have had it," Anderson said.
Despite the drought, Fielder still leads the National League in home runs.
"That's how baseball is," Fielder said. "You hit a lot and they come in bunches. If I could hit 'em every time I would. It's not that easy."
Game notes The Mets moved right-hander
Jorge Sosa to the bullpen, which could eventually make room for
Pedro Martinez. Martinez's scheduled minor-league rehab start was rained out on Wednesday, and he is scheduled to throw 45 pitches against hitters from the Mets' Gulf Coast League team on Thursday. ... Cable network SNY drew 436,000 households for
Tom Glavine's pursuit of his 300th career victory Tuesday night, a record for a Mets telecast on a New York regional sports network. ... Wednesday night's attendance was announced as 42,058, setting a team record as the 21st sellout of the season. The Brewers had 20 sellouts in 2001, their first season in Miller Park.